29 Kan. 49 | Kan. | 1882
The opinion of the-court was delivered by
This was an action brought by Hood, Bonbright & Co. against M. J. Ludes and T. M. Ludes, for the purpose of subjecting certain personal property to the payment of a judgment, which had previously been rendered -in favor of' the plaintiffs against M. J. Ludes. The petition of the plaintiffs set forth and alleged, among other things, 'the above-mentioned judgment, the issuing of an execution thereon, and the return of such execution -unsatisfied; also, that at the time when the debt for which the judgment was rendered was contracted, M. J. Ludes was the owner and possessed of & certain stock of goods and merchandise and other personal property; and that “on-day of-, 18 — , the exact date being unknown to plaintiffs,” he transferred all his personal property subject to execution to T. M. Ludes, the other defendant, who was then, and is now, the wife of said M. J. Ludes, without consideration, and for the purpose and with the intention of hindering, delaying and defrauding his (M. J. Ludes’s) creditors; and that he has
The defendants below, who are now plaintiffs in error, complain of all the foregoing rulings and orders of the district court, to wit: First, the overruling of the defendants’ motion to require the plaintiffs below to make their petition more definite and certain; second, the overruling of the defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition; third, the sustaining of the plaintiffs' demurrer to the second, third and fourth defenses of the answer of M. J. Ludes.
Mrs. Ludes is entitled to have her day in court, but she cannot have her day in court in proceedings in aid of execution, in a case in which she is not a party, except by a circuitous action, which is never encouraged, and is generally abhorred both in law and equity. The plaintiffs in error, defendants below, suggest that a receiver might be appointed in proceedings in aid of execution, and that the receiver might commence an action against Mrs. Ludes, to have her title to the property set aside and declared void; but such a proceeding is an indirect and circuitous way of obtaining justice, and the plaintiff in such an action (the receiver) has no personal interest in the controversy or in the result of the suit. Equity will certainly not declare such a remedy a plain, direct, specific and adequate remedy. The soul and spirit of our civil code is that every person, so. far as is practicable, shall commence and piosecute his own actions in his own name. (Crowell v. Ward, 16 Kas. 61, et seq.) But the proceeding suggested by the plaintiffs'in error, defendants below, would be a proceeding where a party prosecutes an action through some other person and in some other person’s name. Now while this may probably be done in some cases in proceedings in aid of execution, yet it should not be done in any ease where the party interested can just as conveniently prosecute the action in his own name. The kind of action which we are now considering is a kind of action of long standing, and is well recognized by all courts of equity, and there is nothing anywhere in the
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.